Author:
PARASHAR U. D.,DOW L.,FANKHAUSER R. L.,HUMPHREY C. D.,MILLER J.,ANDO T.,WILLIAMS K. S.,EDDY C. R.,NOEL J. S.,INGRAM T.,BRESEE J. S.,MONROE S. S.,GLASS R. I.
Abstract
Although food handlers are often implicated as the source of infection
in outbreaks of
food-borne viral gastroenteritis, little is known about the
timing of infectivity in relation to illness.
We investigated a gastroenteritis outbreak among employees of a manufacturing
company and
found an association (RR=14·1, 95% CI=2·0–97·3)
between disease and eating sandwiches
prepared by 6 food handlers, 1 of whom reported gastroenteritis which had
subsided 4 days
earlier. Norwalk-like viruses were detected by electron microscopy or reverse
transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in stool specimens from several company
employees, the
sick food handler whose specimen was obtained 10 days after resolution
of illness, and an
asymptomatic food handler. All RT-PCR product sequences were identical,
suggesting a
common source of infection. These data support observations from recent
volunteer studies
that current recommendations to exclude food handlers from work for 48–72
h after recovery
from illness may not always prevent transmission of Norwalk-like viruses
because virus can be
shed up to 10 days after illness or while exhibiting no symptoms.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
130 articles.
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